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Cabildo (council)



 
 
For a discussion of the contemporary Spanish and Latin American cabildo, see Ayuntamiento
Ayuntamiento

For a discussion of the historic ayuntamiento, see Cabildo .Ayuntamiento is the general term for the council of a municipality, or sometimes the municipality itself, in Spain and Latin America....
.


A cabildo or ayuntamiento was a former Spanish, colonial administrative council that governed a municipality
Municipality

A municipality is an administrative entity composed of a clearly defined territory and its population and commonly denotes a city, town, or village, or a small grouping of them....
. Cabildos were sometimes appointed, sometimes elected, but were considered to be representative of all land-owning heads of household
Medieval household

The medieval household was, like modern households, the centre of family life for all classes of European society. Yet in contrast to the household of today, it consisted of many more individuals than the nuclear family....
 (vecinos). The colonial cabildo was essentially the same as the one that had developed in medieval Castile
Crown of Castile

The Crown of Castile, as a historic entity, is usually considered to have begun in 1230 with the third and definitive union of the two kingdoms of Kingdom of Le?n and Kingdom of Castile, or more concretely, with the union of their parliaments a few decades later....
.






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For a discussion of the contemporary Spanish and Latin American cabildo, see Ayuntamiento
Ayuntamiento

For a discussion of the historic ayuntamiento, see Cabildo .Ayuntamiento is the general term for the council of a municipality, or sometimes the municipality itself, in Spain and Latin America....
.


A cabildo or ayuntamiento was a former Spanish, colonial administrative council that governed a municipality
Municipality

A municipality is an administrative entity composed of a clearly defined territory and its population and commonly denotes a city, town, or village, or a small grouping of them....
. Cabildos were sometimes appointed, sometimes elected, but were considered to be representative of all land-owning heads of household
Medieval household

The medieval household was, like modern households, the centre of family life for all classes of European society. Yet in contrast to the household of today, it consisted of many more individuals than the nuclear family....
 (vecinos). The colonial cabildo was essentially the same as the one that had developed in medieval Castile
Crown of Castile

The Crown of Castile, as a historic entity, is usually considered to have begun in 1230 with the third and definitive union of the two kingdoms of Kingdom of Le?n and Kingdom of Castile, or more concretely, with the union of their parliaments a few decades later....
. The cabildo was the legal representative of the municipality—and its vecinos—before the crown, therefore it was among the first institutions established by the conquistador
Conquistador

Conquistador is the name given to the Spaniards soldiers, leaders, List of explorers, and adventurers involved in the conquest of the Americas following the discovery of the New World by Christopher Columbus in 1492....
s themselves after, or even before, taking over an area. For example, Hernán Cortés established La Villa Rica de la Vera Cruz to free himself from the authority of the Governor of Cuba. The word cabildo has the same Latin root (capitulum) as the English word "chapter," and in fact, is also the Spanish word for a cathedral chapter
Cathedral chapter

In accordance with canon law, a cathedral chapter is a body of clerics formed to advise a bishop and, in the case of a vacancy in the bishop?s seat, to govern the diocese in his stead....
. Historically the term ayuntamiento was often preceded by the word excelentísimo (English
English language

English is a West Germanic language that originated in Anglo-Saxon England and has lingua franca status in many parts of the world as a result of the military, economic, scientific, political and cultural influence of the British Empire in the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries and that of the United States from the mid 20th century onwa...
: "most excellent") as a style of office
Style (manner of address)

A style of office, or honorific, is a legal, official, or recognized title, in other words a term which by tradition or law precedes a reference to a person who holds a post, or which is used to refer to the political office itself....
, when referring to the council. This phrase is often abbreviated Exc.mo Ay.to

Evolution of the Cabildo

The Castilian cabildo has some similarities to the ancient Roman municipium
Municipium

A municipium belonged to the second highest Social class of Ancient Rome cities, being inferior in status to the colonia . The first municipium was Tusculum....
 and civitas
Civitas

In the history of the Roman Empire, the Latin term civitas referred to the condition of Roman citizenship. It was also used to describe a type of settlement....
—especially in the use of plural administrative officers and its control of the surrounding countryside, the territorium—but its evolution is a uniquely medieval development. With the collapse of the Western Roman Empire
Western Roman Empire

The Western Roman Empire refers to the western half of the Roman Empire, from its division by Diocletian in 285; the other half of the Roman Empire was the Eastern Roman Empire, today widely known as the Byzantine Empire....
 and the establishment of the Visigothic Kingdom
Visigothic Kingdom

The Visigothic kingdom was a Western European power from the fifth to eighth century, one of the successor states to the Western Roman Empire, originally created by the settlement of the Visigoths under their own king in Aquitaine by the Roman government and then extended by conquest over all of the Iberian peninsula....
, the ancient municipal government disappeared. In many areas, seeking to escape from the political instability around them, people entrusted themselves to large landholders
Latifundia

Latifundia are pieces of property covering tremendous areas. The latifundia of Roman empire were great landed estates, specializing in agriculture destined for export: grain, olive oil, or wine....
, exchanging their service for the landholder's protection, in a process that ultimately led to feudalism
Feudalism

Feudalism, a term first used in the early modern period , in its most classic sense refers to a Middle Ages European political system composed of a set of reciprocal law and military obligations among the warrior nobility, revolving around the three key concepts of lords, vassals, and fiefs....
. In areas where the old territoria survived, the Visigothic kings appointed a single officer, called either a comes or a iudice to replace the defunct municipia or civitates. After the Muslim conquest, the new rulers also appointed various judicial officers to manage the affairs of the cities. Qadi
Qadi

Qadi is a judge ruling in accordance with the sharia, Islamic religious law. Because Islam makes no distinction between religious and secular domains, qadis traditionally have jurisdiction over all legal matters involving Muslims....
s heard any cases that fell under the purview of Sharia
Sharia

Sharia is the body of Islamic religious law. The term means "way" or "path to the water source"; it is the legal framework within which the public and private aspects of life are regulated for those living in a legal system based on Fiqh and for Muslims living outside the domain....
 law and sahibs oversaw the administration of the various other areas of urban life, such as the markets and the public order
Police

Police are agents or agencies, usually of the executive , empowered to enforce the law and to ensure public and social order through the legitimized use of force....
.

The cabildo proper began its slow evolution in the process of the Reconquista
Reconquista

The Reconquista was a period of 800 years in the Middle Ages during which several Christian kingdoms of the Iberian Peninsula succeeded in retaking the Iberian Peninsula from the Muslims....
. As fortified areas grew into urban centers or older cities were incorporated into the expanding Christian kingdoms of Portugal
Kingdom of Portugal

The Kingdom of Portugal was Portugal's general designation under the Portuguese monarchy. The kingdom was located in the west of the Iberian Peninsula, Europe, and existed from 1139 to 1910....
, León
Kingdom of León

Kingdom of Le?n was an independent country situated in the northwest region of the Iberian Peninsula. It was founded in 910 A.D. when the Christian princes of Kingdom of Asturias along the Bay of Biscay shifted their main seat from Oviedo to the city of Le?n, Spain....
 and Castile
Kingdom of Castile

Kingdom of Castile was one of the medieval kingdoms of the Iberian Peninsula. It emerged as a political autonomous entity in the 9th century. It was called County of Castile and was held in vassalage from the Kingdom of Le?n....
, kings (and sometimes local lords) granted the cities various levels of self-rule and unique sets of laws (the fuero
Fuero

Fuero is a Spain legal term and concept.The word comes from Latin Forum , an open space used as market, tribunal and meeting place. The same Latin root is the origin of the words for and foire, and the words foral, forais and foro; all of these words have related, but somewhat di...
s
) and made them the administrative center of a large teminus or alfoz, which was analogous to the ancient territorium. In general, municipal governments often consisted of a council (consejo) open to all the property-owning adult males of the city and a nobleman appointed to represent the king and organize the defense of the city and terminus. By the thirteenth century, these open councils proved unwieldy and were replaced by a smaller body, the cabildo or ayuntamiento consisting of set number of regidores (usually twenty-four in the largest cities) elected by the property owners in the city. These new bodies took their permanent form by the end of the fourteenth century. As part of the same process, a municipal council (the consell) with different attributes and composition also evolved in the neighboring Kingdom of Aragon
Crown of Aragon

The Crown of Aragon was a permanent union of multiple titles and states in the hands of the King of Aragon.At the height of its power by the 14th and 15th centuries, the Crown of Aragon was a thalassocracy controlling a large portion of the present-day eastern Spain, Northern Catalonia, as well as some of the major islands and mainland...
 during this period.

Structure

In theory, every municipality in the Spanish colonies in the Americas
Americas

The Americas are the region of the Western hemisphere that consists of the continents of North America and South America with their associated islands and regions....
 and Philippines
Philippines

The Philippines, officially known as the Republic of the Philippines, is a country in Southeast Asia with Manila as its capital city. It comprises 7,107 islands in the western Pacific Ocean....
 had a cabildo. Municipalities were not just the cities but included the surrounding lands. All lands were ultimately assigned to a municipality. Usually the cabildo made local laws and reported to the presidente (president) of the audiencia
Audiencia

For the modern court, see Audiencia Nacional of Spain.The Royal Audiencia and Chanciller?a was a court that functioned as an appellate court in Spain and its empire....
, who in turn reported to the viceroy
Viceroy

A viceroy is a royal official who governs a country or province in the name of and as representative of the monarch. The term derives from the Latin prefix vice-, meaning "in the place of" and the French word roi, meaning king....
. The cabildo had judicial, legislative and administrative duties. For this reason it was often addressed with the formula, Consejo, Justicia y Regimiento (Council, Justice
Judge

A judge, or arbiter of justice, is a lead official who presides over a court of law,which is operated by the local, state, and/or federal government....
 and Government
Executive (government)

Sorry, no overview for this topic
).

The cabildo consisted of several types of officials. There were four to twelve regidor
Regidor

A Regidor is a member of a council of municipalities in Spain and Latin America. Portugal also used to have the same office of Regedor....
es
, depending on the size and importance of the municipality. Regidores, were not just deliberative officers, but all shared in the administration of the territory, dividing tasks among themselves. Initially the regidores were elected by all the heads of household. In the late Middle Ages, these elections often turn violent, with citizens forming bands to control elections and even resorting to murder. To minimize this kings began to appoint a certain number of, or even all of, the regidores in certain cities. By the modern era different cabildos had different mixes of elected and appointed regidores both on the Peninsula and overseas. Finally, to add another layer of control, the kings introduced corregidor
Corregidor (position)

A corregidor was a local, administrative and judicial position in Spain and its Spanish Empire. They began to be appointed in fourteenth century Kingdom of Castile and the institution was definitively abolished in 1833....
es
to represent them directly and preside over the cabildos. Although many municipalities lost their right to elect all or some of their regidores as time went on, cities and cabildos gained new power with the development of the Castilian and Leonese parliaments (the cortes
Cortes Generales

The Cortes Generales is the legislature of Spain. It is a bicameral parliament, composed of the Congress of Deputies and the Spanish Senate ....
) because cities had a right to representation in them.

In addition to the council members, the cabildo had one or two magistrates, the alcalde
Alcalde

Alcalde , or Alcalde ordinario, is the traditional Spain municipal magistrate, who had both judicial and Administration functions. An alcalde was, in the absence of a corregidor , the presiding officer of the Crown of Castile Cabildo and judge of first instance of a town....
s
, whom the regidores elected every January 1. Alcaldes served as judges of first instance in all criminal and civil cases and acted as presiding officers of the cabildo, unless there was a corregidor. In provincial capitals the first alcalde would fill in for incapacitated governors. Other officers were the alférez real (royal standard-bearer), who had a vote in cabildo deliberations and would substitute the alcalde if the latter could not carry out the functions of his office; the alguacil mayor, who oversaw local law enforcement
Police

Police are agents or agencies, usually of the executive , empowered to enforce the law and to ensure public and social order through the legitimized use of force....
; the fiel ejecutor, who was the inspector of weights and meassures and markets and oversaw municipal sanitation; the procurador or city attorney; and a scribe
Scrivener

A scrivener was traditionally a person who could literacy. This usually indicated secretary and Administration duties such as dictation and keeping business, judicial, and history records for monarchs, nobility, temples, and municipality....
.

After the Bourbon Reforms
Bourbon Reforms

The Bourbon Reforms were a set of economic and political legislation introduced by the Spain The Crown under various kings of the House of Bourbon throughout the 18th century....
, peninsulares
Peninsulares

In the Colonialism caste system of Spanish America, a peninsular was a Spain Spanish people or mainland Spaniard residing in the New World, as opposed to a person of full Spanish descent born in the Americas ....
 were almost exclusively appointed to the positions of viceroy and bishop. Other offices, such as oidores of the audiencia, corregidores (in the places where it continued to exist after the Bourbon Reforms) and intendant
Intendant

The title of intendant has been used in a number of countries through history. Traditionally, it refers to the holder of a public administrative office....
s, also saw a rise the the proportion of peninsulares being appointed. These last ones had been positions to which creoles
Criollo (people)

Criollo is a term that dates back to the Spanish colonization of the Americas casta system of Latin America. It referred to a person born in the Spanish colonies deemed to have limpieza de sangre in respect of an individual's purity of European ancestry....
 once had easy access, especially after the approval of the sale of offices which began during the financial crisis at the end of the 16th century. As a result of being shut out of these offices, creoles turned to the cabildos for political power. Soon enough cabildos became the center of power for creoles, as evidenced in many of the clashes, usually with the peninsular-dominant audiencias, in the period leading up to the Wars of Independence
Hispanic American wars of independence

The Hispanic American wars of independence refer to the numerous wars against Mid-nineteenth century Spain in Hispanic America that took place during the early 19th century, from 1808 until 1829 and resulted in the creation of a chain of newly independent countries stretching from Argentina and Chile in the south to Mexico in the north....
.

Modern cabildos


Because cabildos were the city government, the city administrative offices were often called the Cabildo. These names are preserved throughout Latin America
Latin America

Latin America is a region of the Americas where Romance languages ? particularly Spanish language and Portuguese language, and variably French language ? are primarily spoken....
, and even in New Orleans
The Cabildo

The Cabildo was the seat of colonial government in New Orleans, Louisiana, and is now a museum. The Cabildo is located along Jackson Square, New Orleans, Louisiana, adjacent to St....
.

At present, cabildos exist only on the Canary Islands
Canary Islands

The Canary Islands are a Spain archipelago which, in turn, forms one of the Spanish Autonomous Communities and an Outermost Region of the European Union....
, one governing each island, and they are elected. Cabildos there resemble the consells insulars (island councils) of the Balearic Islands
Balearic Islands

The Balearic Islands are an archipelago in the western Mediterranean Sea, near the eastern coast of the Iberian Peninsula.The four largest islands are Majorca, Minorca, Ibiza, and Formentera....
.

Sources

  • Din, Gilbert C. (1996) The New Orleans Cabildo: Colonial Louisiana's First City Government, 1769-1803 Louisiana State University Press, Baton Rouge, ISBN 0-8071-2042-1
  • Fisher, John (1969) "The Intendant System and the Cabildos of Peru, 1784-1810" The Hispanic American Historical Review 49(3): pp. 430-453
  • "Municipios", Diccionario de Historia de Venezuela. Caracas: Fundación Polar, 1997. ISBN 9806397371
  • O'Callaghan, Joseph F. A History of Medieval Spain. Ithaca, Cornell University Press, 1975. ISBN 0-8014-0880-6
  • Pike, Fredrick B. (1960) "The Cabildo and Colonial Loyalty to Hapsburg Rulers" Journal of Inter-American Studies 2(4): pp. 405-420
  • Pike, Fredrick B. (1958) "The Municipality and the System of Checks and Balances in Spanish American Colonial Administration" The Americas 15(2): pp. 139-158
  • Meissner, Jochen (1993) Eine Elite im Umbruch: Der Stadtrat von Mexiko zwischen kolonialer Ordnung und unabhangigem Staat, 1761-1821 F. Steiner, Stuttgart, ISBN 3-515-06098-7, in German, (An Elite in the Breach: The Cabildos of Mexico between Colonial Order and the Unforgiving State)


See also

  • Ayuntamiento
    Ayuntamiento

    For a discussion of the historic ayuntamiento, see Cabildo .Ayuntamiento is the general term for the council of a municipality, or sometimes the municipality itself, in Spain and Latin America....
    , often a synonym of cabildo.
  • Corregidor (position)
    Corregidor (position)

    A corregidor was a local, administrative and judicial position in Spain and its Spanish Empire. They began to be appointed in fourteenth century Kingdom of Castile and the institution was definitively abolished in 1833....
    , official who worked closely with cabildos.
  • Cabildo
    Cabildo

    Cabildo can refer to:* Cabildo , a former Spanish municipal administrative unit governed by a council* Cabildo Canaries, island governments in the Canary Islands...
    , disambiguation page
  • Municipal council
    Municipal council

    A municipal council is the local government of a municipality. Specifically the term can refer to the institutions of various countries that can be translated by this term....
    , comparable system in France and India
  • The Cabildo
    The Cabildo

    The Cabildo was the seat of colonial government in New Orleans, Louisiana, and is now a museum. The Cabildo is located along Jackson Square, New Orleans, Louisiana, adjacent to St....
    , Spanish governmental building in New Orleans
  • Crown of Castile
    Crown of Castile

    The Crown of Castile, as a historic entity, is usually considered to have begun in 1230 with the third and definitive union of the two kingdoms of Kingdom of Le?n and Kingdom of Castile, or more concretely, with the union of their parliaments a few decades later....


External links